Hey, There!

My name is Azam Ali Sher, and I am currently a dual major Ph.D. candidate in Comparative Medicine and Integrative Biology (CMIB) & Environmental Sciences and Integrative Toxicology Sciences (EITS) at Michigan State University. By profession, I am a certified veterinarian and infectious diseases molecular epidemiologist. My long-termĀ goal is to establish an independent research lab that focuses on investigating emerging enteric infections, disease pathogenesis, mechanism of acquiring and spreading antimicrobial resistance and translate these findings into novel therapeutics. Considering the emergence and global spread of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) among bacterial pathogens against life-saving drugs that have become a major challenge for public health and clinical settings, my Ph.D. research focuses on understanding the gut microbiome’s mechanistic role in the emergence and transmission of AMR in commensals and pathogenic bacteria and exploring different dynamics of the gut microbiota pre and post-antibiotic treatment. I am currently working on building an in-vivo animal-based system that mimics the human gut to address this complex scientific question by integrating different Omics and synthetic biology techniques. This study will lead us to uncover different drug-microbiome-host interactions and find some solutions to halt AMR in the gut and environment.

My Mission

“Professionally, I want to be a researcher who can contribute to helping and healing humanity through innovative and cost-effective therapeutics and diagnostics. Besides, I want to empower brilliant and passionate minds from the underprivileged societies-an effort to change the fate of their future generations”

Who Will, Spartans Will!